Papers by Keyword: Tool-Chip Contact

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Abstract: Numerical and experimental approaches are mutually conducted to investigate the temperature rise in steel machining at high cutting speed. The process is modeled using a fully coupled thermo-mechanical finite element scheme. Cutting tests were carried out at 38 m/s on a ballistic orthogonal cutting set-up equipped with an intensified CCD camera. Analysis of experimental results leads to determine the variables which control heat transfer between the tool and chip. A discussion about the most important parameters controlling the temperature rise at the tool-chip interface is then proposed. The results also show that the temperature-dependence of the frictional stress modeling can improve the accuracy of the numerical simulations.
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Abstract: An experimental method using a specifically set-up is presented in order to investigate dry friction phenomena, which occurs in the cutting process at the tool chip contact, in a wide range of sliding speed. A ballistic set-up using an air gun launch is used to measure the friction coefficient for the steel/carbide contact between 15 m/s and 80 m/s. A series of tests are conducted according to the sliding velocity and the normal pressure. These measurements are also introduced in a finite element simulation. The focus of this work is to determine the relevance of the friction modeling in the finite element method of the high speed machining. Modeling results are compared with cutting forces measured on a similar experimental device, which can reproduce perfect orthogonal cutting conditions. Measurement of temperature fields during the cutting process complete the parameter required for modeling. The results show that in high cutting speed, the friction modeling usually used in the FE codes is limited and that novel formulations are needed.
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